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BIODIVERSITY: AN INTRODUCTION Warren Y. Brockelman …
BIODIVERSITY: AN INTRODUCTION Warren Y. Brockelman …

... The regign of dinosaurs, until their extinction caused by collision of a large asteroid with Earth ...
5 Populations and Limits on Populations
5 Populations and Limits on Populations

... Open Populations: Affected by all 4 factors. Closed Populations: Only affected by Births and ...
Frog species skips tadpole stage
Frog species skips tadpole stage

... (GAA) website (www.globalamphibians.org), the 'Philautus Leucorhinus' has been "listed as extinct because it has not been recorded for around 150 years, and extensive searches over the last ten years have failed to locate this species." GAA provides the comprehensive status assessment of the world's ...
Extinction & the Biodiversity Crisis
Extinction & the Biodiversity Crisis

... – A threatened species is “likely to become endangered in the foreseeable future” – An endangered species is “in danger of becoming extinct throughout all or a significant portion of its range” ...
invasive species
invasive species

... Red Ear Sliders can bring bacteria and parasites to other native species and wreck havoc on their population. If you come across a Red Ear Slider Turtle, do not take it to keep as a pet. This turtle can live as long as 30 years! Please call (856) 555-1214 and the National Turtle Foundation (aka NTF) ...
File
File

... and give an example of each. 2. What is a keystone species? ...
Chapter 50 - An Introduction to Ecology and the Biosphere The
Chapter 50 - An Introduction to Ecology and the Biosphere The

... Characteristics of Populations A. Definition: A group of individuals of a single species that simultaneously occupy the same general area (same resources, influenced by same environmental factors, and have a high likelihood of breeding and interacting with each other. B. Density: number of individua ...
Extinction
Extinction

... Habitat destruction - estimated that 5-10% of species will be extinct in thirty years Global warming – estimated that ~35% of species will become committed to extinction in the next fifty years ...
notes
notes

...  Invasive species – out compete native species for space and resources  3 categories of interaction  Competition – not shown to cause extinction  Predation – rats, cats and mongoose account for 43% of recorded bird extinctions  Disease – 50% of native Hawaiian birds extinct due to avian malaria ...
Using Student Generated Species Descriptions and Relationships to
Using Student Generated Species Descriptions and Relationships to

... supplied to students to ensure that students would eventually be able to construct a viable community. For example, one species was described as photosynthetic, another as microscopic. In class (about 30 students), each group had to defend their descriptions to other groups who critiqued and questio ...
Community Ecology
Community Ecology

... If niche overlap is not complete, then the two species may be able to coexist by resource partitioning. Beak size differences among Darwin’s finches on the Galapagos permit multiple species to coexist on islands by feeding on seeds of differing size. The partitioning of space (and differences in t ...
golden paintbrush - Draft
golden paintbrush - Draft

... Note on Taxonomy for Castilleja levisecta: A member of the Figwort family (Scrophulariaceae) which also includes elephant’s head and lousewort. This species also goes by the name “golden Indian paintbrush” (E-Flora, USDA Plants database). Distribution: Elevations <100 m (likely <25m). As with many o ...
Natural Dist-Fire
Natural Dist-Fire

... Species with large home ranges ...
GLOSSARY
GLOSSARY

... as protected areas. The “system” may also include all protected area-related policies, as well as the landscape surrounding the protected areas. Rare, threatened and endangered species: Rare species are any species with very low occurrences, either naturally or as a result of human actions. Threaten ...
competitive exclusion principle
competitive exclusion principle

... position. For example, the niche that was left vacant by the extinction of the tarpan has been filled by other animals (in particular a small horse breed, the konik). ...
Ecosystems and Communities
Ecosystems and Communities

...  Competition  same or different ...
Invadibility in monomorhic two
Invadibility in monomorhic two

... The basic situation of biological coevolution is that in a resident system, where individuals of several species interact with each other, a new mutant clone arises. Then, according to the density dynamics describing the ecological interaction of individuals, the mutant either goes extinct or replac ...
How Introduced Species Affect Ecosystems
How Introduced Species Affect Ecosystems

... Native species are plants and animals that naturally inhabit an area. Introduced species are species that have been introduced into an ecosystem by humans, either intentionally or accidentally. Introduced species usually beneficial or harmless, then can at times dramatically change and ecosystem. Th ...
Endangered Species
Endangered Species

... time, many more species have become extinct than exist today. These species slowly disappeared because of climatic changes and the inability to adapt to such conditions as competition and predation. Since the 1600s, however, the process of extinction has accelerated rapidly through the impact of bot ...
Organisms Can Interact in Different Ways
Organisms Can Interact in Different Ways

... ORGANISMS INTERACT IN DIFFERENT WAYS • The human community competes and cooperates. • Other biological communities do the same. • They share a habitat and resources in the habitat. • How different organisms interact depends on their relationship to each other. ...
3.3 How Introduced Species Affect Ecosystems
3.3 How Introduced Species Affect Ecosystems

...  Introduced species (aka foreign species, non-native species, ...
Unit 2 Review
Unit 2 Review

... A community that will not go through any further succession is called a ________ ________ ...
Community Ecology - Avon Community School Corporation
Community Ecology - Avon Community School Corporation

... affected by complex biotic and abiotic interactions involving exchange of matter and free energy (54.1 54.5).  2.e.3 – Timing and coordination of behavior are regulated by various mechanisms and are important in natural selection (54.1).  4.a.5 – Communities are composed of populations of organism ...
Envi Sci @ CHS
Envi Sci @ CHS

... “If all mankind were to disappear, the world would regenerate back to the rich state of equilibrium that existed ten thousand years ago. If insects were to vanish, the ...
4.2_Causes of Extinction
4.2_Causes of Extinction

...  These are past their reproductive years and may lead to further decline  Geographic range and fragmentation:  Wide range makes the species less likely to be ...
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Occupancy–abundance relationship

In ecology, the occupancy–abundance (O–A) relationship is the relationship between the abundance of species and the size of their ranges within a region. This relationship is perhaps one of the most well-documented relationships in macroecology, and applies both intra- and interspecifically (within and among species). In most cases, the O–A relationship is a positive relationship. Although an O–A relationship would be expected, given that a species colonizing a region must pass through the origin (zero abundance, zero occupancy) and could reach some theoretical maximum abundance and distribution (that is, occupancy and abundance can be expected to co-vary), the relationship described here is somewhat more substantial, in that observed changes in range are associated with greater-than-proportional changes in abundance. Although this relationship appears to be pervasive (e.g. Gaston 1996 and references therein), and has important implications for the conservation of endangered species, the mechanism(s) underlying it remain poorly understood
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